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Edrock200

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Everything posted by Edrock200

  1. Disregard, ran a chkdsk, it repaired some issues, and it stopped cycling. Sorry for raising the flag early.
  2. The latest version of cloudiness goes through Pinning data cycles every 60m or so. They generally last 30m or so and uploads/downloads seem to come to halt while this process occurs. Anyone else seeing this?
  3. Just to add to this, from the other thread, I started manually stopping the service vice dismounting the drive prior to a pc reboot. Last night, the service shut down cleanly after a few minutes without any intervention. Unfortunately upon restart it began the chunk id rescan/rebuild and took several hours. I've also recently received "Access Denied" when attempting to detach my drive on random occasions. I've been able to get around this by offlining the drive in windows disk manager, then detaching. Interestingly, one time when remounting after doing this, Windows (not cloud drive) mounted the drive as read only. I was able to use the diskpart utility to make it writable again.
  4. Not sure if this is related to your issue, but I had drive corruptions as well with my 256tb cloud drive. Chkdsk would detect the errors, but could never repair them. I then found an article on Microsoft's knowledgebase stating that chkdsk repairs require the Volume Shadow Copy service, and that service does not work on partitions over 64TB. I couldn't shrink my partition size in clouddrive, but I could drink in in Windows Disk manager to 50TB, then I was successful in having chkdsk repair the volume.
  5. Some good reference info: https://gist.github.com/0xbadfca11/da0598e47dd643d933dc and here: https://charbelnemnom.com/2016/01/how-to-recover-data-on-refs-volume-between-different-windows-server-2016-technical-preview-builds-refs-ws2016-hyperv/
  6. In addition to av, you'll also want to turn off windows indexing on the hidden cache drive directory
  7. This is why I would still encrypt: Q: Who manages the encryption keys?+ A: The keys are managed by Microsoft.
  8. To the op, if you clear your cache does it "jump start" for a while? If so, assuming connectivity is good, could be a cache drive I/o issue, prefetch settings, or something is trying to do aggressive random read/writes to the drive. Open perfmon and check drive tab for details on which processes are reading and writing to what files.
  9. Fwiw I ran into this problem too when seeding my drive with Google drive sync. What I found was Google drive writes temp files to a hidden directory on the same drive your seeding, then copies them over when complete. This causes constant requests to the same chunks, eventually causing throttling then disconnects. If your seeding method works the same way you can try my fix. I changed the cache mode from fixed to proportional and left it at 50/50 so the temp chunks could stay in read cache. Before I did this my downloads were constantly at least 50% of my upload speeds even though I don't have verify chunks on nor was I doing any reads against the drive, and eventually disconnects. Prefetch was unusable. After changing it barely reads during seeding and prefetch works. The only time I get slow downs are when my disk I/o on cache drive can't keep up, but generally only lasts a few seconds but doesn't cause disconnects. Here's my settings: 50tb clouddrive encrypted 80gb proportional cache 50/50 10 dl threads 5 ul threads Prefetch trigger 5mb Prefetch fwd 50mb (have tested UpTo 200mb w/o issue but found anything over 50 didn't increase overall avg read speed during burst transfers). Get steady ~15-20MB (150-200mbs) read speed on burst transfer downloads with these settings. Have gig connection but upload throttled to 350 and dl to 250mbs. Unlocking these throttles did not increase download speeds with prefetch set higher. Uploads would surge to 550+ then get throttled by Google regardless of thread count. Time window 30 seconds Upload chunk 20mb Download size 5mb (anything larger caused disconnect/throttling issues and slow performance, and lower would cause the same issues due to clouddrive thread count surge when it tries to catch up) Chunk cache size 100mb Provider Google drive Drive indexing disabled Antivirus scans disabled on drive Not sure if drive pool will support, but if your using encryption for each drive you may want to make your drives decrypted, add to drive pool, then use bitlocker to encrypt drive pool drive so your CPU isn't doing multiple encryption/decryption cycles against the same data. I would also disable read striping until your seeding is complete to prevent a download thread surge.
  10. first instinct is to say congrats yet doesnt sound right at the same time happy to hear your working again
  11. it appears to be normalized now. Fingers crossed for you! You might want to try editing the Program Files/Stablebit/Clouddrive/Clouddrive.service.default.config file to up the timeout and retry threshold/tolerance counts, then restart the service.
  12. FYI in case anyone is getting Google drive disconnects: https://www.google.com/appsstatus
  13. Thanks Christopher! Just to clarify, I see the Native service is listed as "Stablebit CloudDrive Shutdown Service", this is in addition to the primary Stablebit CloudDrive Service. I'm assuming I should stop down the primary "Stablebit Clouddrive Service." If so, I can just create a batch file with elevated privileges to to stop the service then restart the machine whenever I need to restart. Thanks again!
  14. Right, I was just wondering if there is a manual way to initiate that process other than initiating a system shutdown. Are you saying stopping the shutdown service will do that?
  15. Make sure you turn off drive indexing and exclude your drive from scheduled antivirus scans.
  16. You can also try the native windows command: Mountvol driveletter /p I.e. Mountvol e: /p
  17. I have the same issue and resort to detaching the drive prior to reboot. Is their a way to manually signal the shutdown process in clouddrive so we don't have to reattach the drive on reboot?
  18. Mystery solved. I had installed netdrive and mounted my Google drive, but didn't use it to copy anything to/from drive. My a/v scanner is configured to scan local and net drives, and it began attempting to scan repeatedly. Apparently Google didn't like this. I contacted them after they unlocked the account and figured it out. All is well. Sorry for the false flag. I like the idea of sharing the drive though to prevent getting locked out. I own my domain and gsuite account. I bought it and have 6 accounts paid for monthly (6 family members, we each pay $10/mo). I have about 20tb of system backups, system images, photos, multimedia and my iTunes library. On a side note, the latest version of cloudrive allows me to use prefetch now w/o causing disconnects or throttling.
  19. No, my own domain that I pay for. I asked Google to enable and they did, but just pointed me to a generic ToS as to the reason. For now, I have access.
  20. Just had my google drive account disabled, only thing on it was cloud drive. Anyone else have this happen?
  21. Edrock200

    Error Log ..

    Odd, I just got those same errors a few hours ago while trying to dismount/remount my drive to a new pc
  22. It looks like this phishing attack may be the cause of the outage: https://www.reddit.com/r/google/comments/692cr4/new_google_docs_phishing_scam_almost_undetectable/ https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/massive-gmail-google-doc-phishing-email
  23. wow good catch! My drive won't mount at all either and was worried. Thanks for sharing.
  24. Just a heads up, you can create drives up to 256tb, you just have to type it in. You can also resize drives, but you need to ensure the cluster size you set on creation will support the larger drive sizes. I created on massive 256tb. I'm not saying this is the best setup, but from a performance perspective it works just as well as my 2tb test drive in terms of speed. Cloud drive doesn't actually allocate the full drive space on creation, so I aside from the OS needing to mount the file allocation space, I don't think you will see performance differences based on drive sizes. It's also important to note that although some settings can be changed on the fly or when mounting the drive, some settings cannot be changed once the drive is created unless you destroy it and start over. Off the top of my head the ones that cannot be changed I believe are: chunk size, cluster size, whether or not the drive is encrypted, if encrypted the key itself, and I think a chunk verification setting, but I could be wrong on that last one. Min download size and chunk cache size can be changed, but not on the fly. You need to dismount and remount the drive to change this setting. Prefetch, up/down thread count, bandwidth throttling and cache size/type can all be changed on the fly. The biggest perfomance gains I've seen are from the chunk size, min chunk download/upload, read/write i/o threads and prefetch settings. These settings vary drastically depending on what type of media you are storing. If it's small data files, then smaller chunks are better. If it's large multimedia, larger chunks are better. I'm doing primarily multimedia storage so my settings are: 5/5 read/write threads 20MB chunks (max for Google Drive) 100MB Chunk Cache 20MB Min Download size 50GB Cache, Epandable (I've changed this from 20 all the way up to 80GB without much difference in streaming performance, however because I frequently move large files around, I benefit from the increased cache. Prefetch: 20MB Trigger 100MB Prefetch 120 Second Window 250MB/250MB Up/Down Throttle You'll probably notice that most others doing multimedia have much more aggressive prefetch settings than mine. In my case, these settings allow 3 to 4 HD streams without issue, and more aggressive prefetch settings cause me throttling and disconnect issues.
  25. In case anyone else comes across this thread who is also using Plex, don't let Plex scan your drive until your initial upload is done. I have mine set not to generate thumbnails or due deep media analysis, but it still makes a lot of calls to the drive on initial scan which will potentially cause throttling. Lessons learned on my end: Create drive Turn prefetch off Turn off excessive indexers and Google sync clients if your drive is using Google storage* Preload drive with content Turn on media scanners and let initial scan complete Turn on prefetch If you try to do it all in parallel you will most likely get throttled and it will probably take longer than doing it in the order above. Since Google drive client doesn't offer any detailed stats, I didn't realize it had essentially slowed to zero. *If you are using Google drive client to preload your clouddrive, throttle drive client up/down to 99/99mbs (max it will allow) and cloud drive to 250/250 up down with 5/5 io threads up/down and no prefetch. Should you find that you need to move your drive to another pc and still want drive client linked to cloudrive for syncing, do this: Old PC: Close Google drive client Backup folder %localappdata%\google\drive Detach cloud drive New pc: Install Google drive client and authenticate to account. Accept defaults but immediately close client after logon Mount clouddrive to SAME drive letter as old PC Restore %localappdata%\google\drive from backup to new pc Relaunch Google drive client This will restore the drive client file hashes and prevent your new pc from needing to download and hash every single file again. Alternatively you can open regedit and go to hkcu/software/Google/drive and point the appdata directory to your cloud drive and restore to that directory, so the hash stays with the drive. Since it's frequently used it should stay in cache when mounted. Ed *you can turn prefetch back on after initial load of files onto cloud drive *I did not mean to mark my own reply as best answer. I was just trying to mark the entire thread as solved.
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